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More cases of U.K. COVID-19 variant found in Canada

OTTAWA — A contagious new strain of the virus that causes COVID-19 has infiltrated two more regions of Canada, health officials said Sunday, a day after announcing the country's first cases of the variant had been detected.
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OTTAWA — A contagious new strain of the virus that causes COVID-19 has infiltrated two more regions of Canada, health officials said Sunday, a day after announcing the country's first cases of the variant had been detected. 

The strain of the novel coronavirus has now been found in Ottawa and the Vancouver Island area of B.C., public health authorities said. 

Both patients had recently returned from the U.K., where the variant was first detected. 

"This further reinforces the need for Ontarians to stay home as much as possible and continue to follow all public health advice, including the provincewide shutdown measures," said Dr. Barbara Yaffe, Ontario's associate chief medical officer of health.

Ontario reported Canada's first two known cases of the virus on Saturday in a couple from Durham Region, just east of Toronto. 

Public Health Ontario announced Sunday that after further investigation, they found the couple had been in contact with someone who recently returned from the U.K. 

The agency had initially said the couple had no known history of travel or contact with people who had recently travelled. 

Public Health Ontario said it is screening large volumes of positive COVID-19 samples to investigate how prevalent the U.K. variant is in the province. But health officials are not planning to report the different strains out separately in provincial summary reports.

The Public Health Agency of Canada said while early data suggests the new variant may be more transmissible, there is no evidence the variant causes more severe symptoms or impacts vaccine effectiveness.

The Ontario government noted on Saturday that the discovery of the variant was “not unexpected” due to international travel.

The provincial government said it is prepared to start a COVID-19 testing program in airports but is calling for support from the federal government.

News of the new cases came as Ontario and Quebec both recorded more than 2,000 diagnoses of the virus Sunday. 

Ontario reported 2,005 cases of COVID-19 and 18 new deaths, while Quebec announced 2,291 new infections and 12 more deaths.

They said 6,783 new cases of COVID-19 and 110 additional deaths linked to the novel coronavirus have been reported since Thursday. 

The three-day total came after the province did not publish data on the number of new infections or deaths on Friday or Saturday.

Meanwhile, Alberta's chief medical officer said there were an estimated 500 new COVID-19 cases recorded on Boxing Day, but she cautioned the low number is a result of fewer tests being performed on Christmas Day.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw has been tweeting short COVID-19 updates over the last few days which contain estimated numbers of new cases. She reported Alberta saw an estimated 1,200 new cases on Dec. 24 and about 900 on Christmas Day.

Health officials in Manitoba reported 524 new COVID-19 cases and 28 new deaths because of the virus. 

The province said one of the deaths was a woman in her 30s from the Winnipeg health region while the rest were in their 60s or older.

In Atlantic Canada, New Brunswick public health officials reported two new cases in the Moncton region. 

Newfoundland and Labrador also saw three new cases of COVID-19 since its last public advisory on Christmas Eve.

The province’s public health officials say two of the cases are travel-related and involve individuals who returned to the province after working in Alberta, while the third is still under investigation.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 27, 2020

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This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Facebook and Canadian Press News Fellowship.

Maan Alhmidi, The Canadian Press